Malaysian Borneo (6 nights)

Borneo! I was excited to finally visit this mythical locale of exotic adventure stories. We opted to visit the Malaysian state of Sarawak, which is the northwest part of the island of Borneo. Aside from a brief middle-of-the-night stop in Singapore, this is the closest to the equator we got and we definitely felt the heat.

Kuching

Known as the City of Cats, Kuching is the largest city in Sarawak. We did three main things in the area: see wild orangutans, learn how to bake and decorate cakes, and visit a traditional longhouse.

First we visited the Semenggoh Wildlife Center, where rehabilitated but wild orangutans come for twice-daily feedings at their whim. We were lucky to see seven, including the youngest of the group, the darling three-year-old Ruby (yes, that is her name!). We took some cute videos: video 1, video 2, video 3, video 4.

We spent two afternoons at the Anna Cake Training Centre. On the first day, we learned how to make the complex Kek Lapis Sarawak (Sarawak layer cake). It was repetitive, but we enjoyed it and the cake was delicious. On the second visit, we opted to learn traditional cake decorating techniques, including smooth frosting, piping, roses, and leaves. Afterward we returned to the guesthouse with three cakes to share and made a lot of people happy.

Finally, we spent a night in a traditional Bidayuh longhouse village. After an afternoon trekking to a jungle waterfall, we got to see and try traditional costumes, dance, and instruments. We enjoyed seeing how the villagers are blending traditional culture (close, mostly related community; bamboo structures; pigs and chickens) with modernity (electricity, tourism).

Mulu

We then flew across Sarawak to Mulu National Park (near Miri in the above map) and spent two days exploring caves and the rainforest. Because of our limited time, we were only able to tour the four “show caves” and take a rainforest canopy walk (suspension bridges in the trees). We took a longboat ride, saw a lot, and walked a lot: 9 miles the first day. The caves contained interesting rock formations and in one case, millions of bats, their guano, and the insect ecosystem it supports. There were mixed feelings about walking through this.

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Everything looks so amazing! You do a great job of cataloging the events and it is easy for the reader to follow you on your adventure. Every morning when I check my email I hope there is an update from Traveling Ruby. Continue to have a blast and I hope to see guys in the near future.